Barclays shares were slightly lower in Tuesday trading as investors digested fresh UK labour-market data, shifting Bank of England (BoE) expectations, and the latest update on the lender’s ongoing share buyback programme.
As of the latest delayed quote available during the session, Barclays (LSE: BARC) was trading at 451.90p, down 2.35p (-0.52%) on the day. The stock opened at 453.00p, traded as high as 457.45p, and touched a low of 451.75p. The previous close was 454.25p.
That left the bank’s equity near the top end of its recent trading range—still close to its 52‑week high area (around 457p) after a strong 2025 run, but easing as the market repriced the near-term rate outlook. [1]
Barclays share price today: the key numbers investors are watching
Here are the headline figures shaping the “Barclays share price today” conversation:
- Price: 451.90p (delayed)
- Day move: -0.52%
- Day range: 451.75p – 457.45p [2]
- 52‑week range: roughly 223.75p – 457.50p [3]
- Market cap: about £62.6bn [4]
- Valuation snapshot (Google Finance): P/E around 11.22; dividend yield shown around 1.88% [5]
Two details stood out for traders:
- Resistance is forming around the 457p area (near today’s high and near the 52‑week ceiling). [6]
- Support is emerging in the low‑452p zone, where the shares found today’s floor.
What’s moving Barclays shares on 16.12.2025?
Barclays didn’t release earnings today, but the stock is being pulled by three big forces that dominated UK and European market coverage on 16 December:
1) UK labour-market cooling pushed rate-cut expectations higher
The UK jobs picture weakened, with unemployment rising to 5.1% (highest since early 2021) and private-sector pay growth easing, strengthening the view that the BoE may cut rates soon.
For bank shares like Barclays, rate-cut expectations can cut both ways:
- Potential headwind: lower policy rates can compress lending margins over time (especially if deposit pricing is sticky).
- Potential tailwind: easier policy can support credit demand, reduce stress in parts of the economy, and help sentiment.
2) Markets are pricing a BoE cut to 3.75% this week
The pound and the rates market reflected that narrative. Reuters reported that markets were pricing a high probability (around 90%) of a BoE cut to 3.75% at Thursday’s meeting, with expectations for cumulative easing by end‑2026 also in focus.
For Barclays shareholders, Thursday’s BoE decision matters because it influences:
- the outlook for net interest income in the UK consumer/corporate bank,
- credit conditions and arrears risk, and
- broader risk appetite for financials.
3) A mixed UK equity tape: FTSE down, but macro crosscurrents remain supportive for financials
London’s FTSE 100 fell modestly on the day, weighed by declines in energy and defence shares amid falling oil prices and shifting geopolitical sentiment.
At the European level, a Reuters market update noted European banks were higher as a group even while defence and some tech names slid, highlighting that financials still have underlying momentum heading into year-end central-bank decisions.
Barclays buyback news today: “Transaction in own shares” (RNS)
The most Barclays-specific news dated 16 December 2025 was a regulatory announcement confirming another tranche of share repurchases.
Barclays disclosed that it bought 2,644,676 ordinary shares (for cancellation) on 15 December 2025 as part of the buyback it announced on 23 October 2025.
Key details from the filing include:
- Highest price paid: 456.9000p
- Lowest price paid: 448.7000p
- Volume-weighted average price (VWAP): 453.6861p
After cancelling the repurchased shares, Barclays said its issued share capital would be 13,880,135,889 ordinary shares(and it holds no ordinary shares in treasury, per the statement).
It also disclosed cumulative progress: since the programme began on 23 October, Barclays has repurchased 34,191,005 shares in aggregate at a VWAP of 439.0036p.
Why the buyback matters for the Barclays share price
Buybacks can be important for market psychology and valuation because they:
- reduce the share count (potentially lifting EPS over time),
- signal confidence in capital strength and future earnings, and
- can provide a “bid” under the stock during weaker sessions.
Based on the disclosed totals, the repurchased shares so far represent roughly 0.25% of the current issued share count (an indicative calculation using the RNS figures).
Analyst forecasts for Barclays: where price targets sit right now
While intraday moves are being driven by macro catalysts, medium-term investors are looking at whether Barclays is “fully priced” after its rally—and how much upside brokers still see.
Consensus view: “Buy”, but targets cluster around the mid‑460p range
Investing.com’s consensus snapshot shows an overall “Buy” stance, with 11 Buy / 3 Hold / 1 Sell, and an average 12‑month price target of 460.73p (with a high estimate of 525p and low estimate of 337p). [7]
That framing implies the market is close to consensus “fair value” today—i.e., expectations of further upside exist, but they are not uniform, and the downside range is still meaningful.
TipRanks: higher average target (but different analyst sample)
TipRanks shows an average 12‑month price target of 483.33p, with a stated high forecast of 525p and low forecast of 440p, alongside a “Strong Buy” type consensus (based on its tracked ratings). [8]
TipRanks also flags buybacks as a supportive factor and characterises the technical backdrop as constructive, while noting valuation considerations. [9]
MarketBeat: more cautious average target
MarketBeat’s summary (based on a smaller set of analysts in its snapshot) shows an average target of 445.83p, with targets ranging from 380p to 500p—a notably more conservative midpoint versus other aggregators. [10]
What to take away from the forecast spread
Across the main aggregators available today:
- The bull case tends to assume Barclays can keep delivering capital returns (buybacks/dividends), defend profitability as rates peak then ease, and sustain investment banking/markets revenues.
- The bear case tends to focus on margin compression as rates fall, potential credit deterioration if growth slows, and the inherent volatility of investment banking earnings.
Importantly, the dispersion between 337p on the low end and 525p on the high end (per the Investing.com snapshot) shows analysts still disagree meaningfully about the cycle and the appropriate valuation multiple. [11]
Technical and sentiment read-through: momentum meets a ceiling
From a purely price-action perspective, Barclays is testing a crowded zone:
- Near-term resistance: ~457p (today’s high area / 52‑week high zone) [12]
- Near-term support: ~452p (today’s low)
Investing.com’s technical summary (based on moving averages and indicators) described the daily signal as “Strong Buy.” [13]
Even so, with the share price near a yearly high, day-to-day direction can be heavily influenced by macro data surprises (jobs, inflation) and central bank messaging—especially in a week dominated by BoE expectations.
What to watch next: catalysts that could move BARC
For investors following the Barclays share price into year-end, the next catalysts are clear:
- Bank of England decision (Thursday) – markets have leaned toward a cut, so the vote split, guidance, and inflation commentary may matter as much as the headline rate move.
- Further buyback disclosures – daily/regular “transaction in own shares” updates can influence sentiment at the margin, especially if the share price is testing highs.
- Next results window – Investing.com lists 10 February 2026 as the next scheduled earnings report date, which is likely to become the next major company-specific price driver. [14]
Bottom line on Barclays share price today
On 16 December 2025, Barclays shares traded modestly lower around 452p, after touching 457p earlier in the session, as investors balanced:
- a softer UK labour-market backdrop that strengthens the case for a BoE cut,
- mixed UK equity performance with sector rotation effects,
- and fresh confirmation that Barclays continues to shrink its share count via buybacks.
In short: the near-term story is macro-driven, but the underlying capital return narrative remains a key support—and that combination will keep BARC sensitive to central-bank headlines and economic data as the week progresses.
References
1. www.google.com, 2. www.google.com, 3. www.google.com, 4. www.google.com, 5. www.google.com, 6. www.google.com, 7. uk.investing.com, 8. www.tipranks.com, 9. www.tipranks.com, 10. www.marketbeat.com, 11. uk.investing.com, 12. www.google.com, 13. www.investing.com, 14. www.investing.com


